Romana
The Timeless Child
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2018
- Messages
- 5,097
- SL Rez
- 2010
He's more like this guy: Brunt, FCAlove the analogy but i think he's more Ferengi with the rules of acquisition..
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He's more like this guy: Brunt, FCAlove the analogy but i think he's more Ferengi with the rules of acquisition..
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Yeah, few of them didn't bother looking into the blowjob angle.In an interview on Fox News, Starr said “the concern, that I think is a fair concern,” was: “Is the report going to be written in a fair and balanced way?”
Starr blamed Mueller’s “choice of staff.”
We’ve now gotten more details about about what we’ve basically already known or should have known: the fix is in. The goal here is to max out every avenue to protect the President from the contents of the Report. Bill Barr and his friends at the White House clearly do not care what anyone outside of Trump world thinks at this point. They are not even bothering to keep up appearances at the margins. A good and increasingly relevant question for Bill Barr at this point would be at what point the statutory powers of the Attorney General can amount to obstruction of justice if exercised with corrupt intent.
Do we even *need* a conspiracy like that at this point?Not to spin conspiracy theories but how do we know the redacted report we will get today is the Meuller report?
He also said "This is the worst thing that ever happened to me!" (Because everything's about him)When former Attorney General Jeff Sessions told President Donald Trump that a special counsel had been appointed to conduct the Russia investigation, the president responded: “Oh my God. This is terrible. This is the end of my Presidency. I’m fucked.”
I've seen people saying "look at the context," meaning that he seems to have spoken from frustration and anger rather than making a specific admission that Mueller would uncover criminal behaviour by Trump and his campaign, but that seems to me neither here nor there -- at least over here, whether the defendant intends to pervert the course of justice because he wants to conceal his criminal behaviour or for some other reason isn't particularly important (though it may become so at sentencing).10 different instances of obstruction, but The Criminal-In-Chief was frustrated and angry, so nothing to see here!
Many criminal statutes include words like "willfully" or "knowingly", requiring you to prove intent to convict. For example, murder requires intent, but a lesser crime, involuntary manslaughter, does not. Both involve killing someone. And the legal standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt" for the jury in criminal cases. It is quite possible that in this case the "preponderance of the evidence " standard was met (more likely than not), but not beyond a reasonable doubt. Civil cases usually have the "preponderance" standard.Page 187 (of the text, page 195 of the pdf) , about the Trump Tower meeting:
“On the facts here, the government would be unlikely to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the June 9 meeting participants had general knowledge that their conduct was unlawful.”
This just in. It's ok to break the law if you're too stupid to know what you're doing is illegal.
If Donald suffers from CRS (Can't Remember Shit), then he's unfit for the office of president. I like presidents who remember who are our allies, and who are our enemies. And remember that the head of state of Puerto Rico is himself, because it is part of this country and they are US citizens.Trump was given essentially a take home test with questions to which he answered no less than 35 questions with, "I don't remember." Mueller even mentioned that his responses to the questions were insufficient.
Sure.Many criminal statutes include words like "willfully" or "knowingly", requiring you to prove intent to convict. For example, murder requires intent, but a lesser crime, involuntary manslaughter, does not. Both involve killing someone. And the legal standard is "beyond a reasonable doubt" for the jury in criminal cases. It is quite possible that in this case the "preponderance of the evidence " standard was met (more likely than not), but not beyond a reasonable doubt. Civil cases usually have the "preponderance" standard.
Maybe he doesn't know all of those countries that are US Territories that do belong to the US. That's my guess.If Donald suffers from CRS (Can't Remember Shit), then he's unfit for the office of president. I like presidents who remember who are our allies, and who are our enemies. And remember that the head of state of Puerto Rico is himself, because it is part of this country and they are US citizens.
I think often enough it's less about how the crimes are defined, and more about how the are enforced in practice. On paper, there is a high standard of proof for most or all crimes, but you can often get a jury to convict a random poor person based on police claiming they seemed like the most likely suspect. It's also often much easier to intimidate poor people into taking a plea bargain even when they know they are innocent.Sure.
But those other things are still crimes. They weren't charged with anything.
Basically, crimes that rich white people are more likely to commit have a higher requirement for conviction.